The Garfield Picture Theatre, Victoria Australia - ALIVE, WELL & RESTORED

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Taken on: September 10, 2007

Uploaded on: October 22, 2018

Exposure: 1/170 sec, f/11.0, ISO 100

Camera: FUJIFILM FinePix A700

Software: Digital Camera FinePix A700 Ver1.00

Size: 3.3 MB

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Aperture value: 69/10

F number: 11

Focal plane y resolution: 4000

Pixel Y dimension: 2304

Date time original: Mon Sep 10 10:40:08 +0000 2007

Light source: 0

Resolution unit: 2

Y resolution: 72

Flash: 24

Exposure program: 2

Brightness value: 979/100

Focal plane resolution unit: 3

YCbCr positioning: 2

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Date time digitized: Mon Sep 10 10:40:08 +0000 2007

Focal length: 82/5

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Exposure bias value: 0

Custom rendered: 0

Software: Digital Camera FinePix A700 Ver1.00

Max aperture value: 14/5

ISO speed ratings: 100

Exposure mode: 0

Compressed bits per pixel: 4

Make: FUJIFILM

Date time: Mon Sep 10 10:40:08 +0000 2007

Sensing method: 2

Color space: 1

White balance: 0

Shutter speed value: 149/20

Exposure time: 1/170

Focal plane x resolution: 4000

Model: FinePix A700

Metering mode: 5

Pixel X dimension: 3072

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X resolution: 72

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The Garfield Picture Theatre, Victoria Australia  - ALIVE, WELL & RESTORED

The Garfield Picture Theatre, Victoria Australia - ALIVE, WELL & RESTORED - The theatre was one of the many movie-viewing venues constructed during the Australia-wide boom in cinema building in the 1920s. The Garfield Picture Theatre was Cardinia Shire’s first cinema in the region, followed by Kooweerup’s Wattle Theatre and Pakenham’s King’s Picture Theatre which opened in mid to late 1927. The theatre is significant to the area as it’s one of the few picture theatre buildings remaining in the shire. The Garfield Picture Theatre was not only the main entertainment hub for the area, but it was the town’s first source of electricity. The theatre closed in 1962 and reopened in the 1980s as the Garfield Trading Center, owned by Sam Jensen, who used to sell used furniture, bric-a-brac and antiques. The theatre stayed that way until 2001, when renovations began by current owners Fred and Susan Perez. The theatre was in need of some serious repair and improvement. Fred and Susan spent 17 years relaying and polishing the original floorboards, installing roof insulation, as well as building a commercial kitchen, inside toilets with a disable toilet, upstairs living quarters, full veranda, and drainage and decking around the whole outer edge of the theatre. As well as a lick of paint, Fred and Susan spent a great deal of time securing all her loose bricks… hence their nick name for her ‘Lucy’ for loosey bricks! Fred and Susan’s dream to return the venue to its former glory took a little longer than originally expected, but the outcome was well worth all their effort. The theatre is a well-preserved and gabled red brick building, with internal renovations creating a grander experience than the original. The front facade still has its original raised cement letters `Garfield Picture Theatre' and sits above a deep cantilever street veranda which extends the front of the building … Supplied by Greg Lynch -

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